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Arctic Blasts Keeping Northeast in a Deep Freeze
The Nashua Telegraph ^ | 01/22/02 | Anne Wallace Allen

Posted on 01/22/2003 7:30:41 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo

JAY, Vt. – The Northeast has been seized by extreme cold for more than a week now, with wind chill readings so low that even hardy Vermonters are thinking twice about going outside.

“It will take a special attitude to be out there today,” said Bill Stenger, general manager of the Jay Peak ski area, where the afternoon temperature was 14 below zero.

Arctic air has been blowing through the Northeast for the past week, creating wind chills as low as minus 60. The last time the mercury in New York City rose above freezing was Jan. 13 – eight icy days in a row as of Tuesday – and the deep freeze is expected to continue through the weekend.

Temperatures in Massachusetts ranged from 10 degrees in Boston to nine below in Amherst, one of the state’s colder spots, said Jim Notchey, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Taunton, Mass.

With 20 to 25 mph winds snapping at ears and fingers, the air probably felt much colder, he said: Boston’s air crackled at 21 degrees below zero with wind chill, while Worcester’s 2 degrees at 7 a.m. probably felt more like 24 below.

Other parts of the country are shivering too.

Temperatures never got above zero Tuesday in far northern Minnesota and North Dakota and stayed in the single digits across wide areas of the northern Plains and Great Lakes.

But it is the duration of the cold spell that is getting to people in the Northeast, where the last couple of winters were unseasonably mild.

“It’s remarkable, the longevity of it,” said Tim Morrin, a National Weather Service meteorologist. “It just doesn’t seem like we’re getting a break.”

Harold Clark spent Tuesday morning on a New York City street corner handing out advertising fliers.

“I got on about six layers of clothes – thermal underwear, two sets of sweaters and a coat,” said Clark, 70, as he stomped his feet and rubbed his hands.

At the Pine Street Inn in Boston, the homeless shelter’s 850 beds were full, and another 166 people came in looking for refuge from the cold, said spokeswoman Shepley Metcalf.

“Most of them end up sleeping on the floor of the lobby, on mats and blankets,” Metcalf said. “We won’t turn people away, so we are really crowded.”

Linda Baker, who runs a day-care center at her home in Hyde Park in northern Vermont, kept her six young charges inside while the wind blew sheets of pebble-hard snow across the yard.

“They put wax paper on their feet and skate on the carpet,” Baker said.

Refugees from the cold have been flocking to the Golden Image Sun Centers, a tanning salon in Watertown, N.Y., where the temperature hit 26 below zero just before dawn Tuesday, then struggled to 2 above during the afternoon.

“Everybody wants to come in and get warm from the inside out,” said owner Andrea Morgia. “A few minutes in a booth and your bones are warm and you’re good for the rest of the day.”

Atop Cannon Mountain, a northern New Hampshire ski area, assistant ski patrol director Gareth Slattery tried to ignore the minus-60 wind chill, a product of 27 mph wind gusts and a temperature of 14 below zero.

“Wind chill is if you’re standing out there naked, and I don’t see anyone out there naked,” Slattery said.

“It’s something weathermen use to scare the general public with.”

Despite Slattery’s theory, the cold discouraged all but the most committed skiers at Jay, just a few miles below the Canadian border.

“The guy at the border thought we were nuts when we were going skiing,” said 20-year-old Laura Bresinger, who had come from Montreal.

Her mother, Anne Mary Bresinger, went out to talk to a lone skier, then came back in with her nose red and glasses frosted over and announced that the family would go shopping in Burlington instead of skiing.

Others forced to be outdoors did the best they could to stay warm.

Russell Barbour, 31, took his lunch break inside his truck after a six-hour stretch working outdoors at a Winchester, Mass., construction site.

“I can’t feel enough of my body to tell you how cold I am,” said Barbour, an iron worker from Putnam, Conn.

“The cold isn’t so bad,” he said. “It’s the wind that makes it so horrible. But I’d rather have this than rain or snow. Hey, it pays the bills; I love what I do.”


TOPICS: Extended News; Miscellaneous; US: Connecticut; US: Maine; US: Massachusetts; US: New Hampshire; US: New York; US: Vermont
KEYWORDS: arcticair; dangerouscold; newenglandwinter; northeast; windchill
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"Nanook of the North" reporting from the frozen tundra known as New Hampshire....
1 posted on 01/22/2003 7:30:41 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo
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2 posted on 01/22/2003 7:32:41 AM PST by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: NewHampshireDuo
It is a balmy 16 degrees today in NYC. Where I live it is 13 degrees. Just lovely weather for standing on the platform waiting for a train to come. Wind chill is -4.
3 posted on 01/22/2003 7:33:54 AM PST by areafiftyone (Hillary and Pelosi are Raelian clones)
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To: NewHampshireDuo
If I had an SUV, I'd go out and drive it more, in an attempt to release enough greenhouse gases to warm up my neighbors to the north.
4 posted on 01/22/2003 7:35:16 AM PST by 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
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To: NewHampshireDuo
It's getting cold globally because of global warming.

(I say with a straight face!)

5 posted on 01/22/2003 7:37:22 AM PST by avg_freeper
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To: 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
If I had an SUV, I'd go out and drive it more, in an attempt to release enough greenhouse gases to warm up my neighbors to the north.

Very kind of you to offer to do so.

6 posted on 01/22/2003 7:40:29 AM PST by syriacus (Those who attempt to cool the earth would bring freezing death to the poor and homeless.)
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To: NewHampshireDuo
It's all about the Wind Chill Factor. Reporting in from Middlebury, VT where it's about 3 degrees right now but without wind. Really not that bad.
7 posted on 01/22/2003 7:40:58 AM PST by ricpic
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To: areafiftyone
It is a balmy 16 degrees today in NYC. Where I live it is 13 degrees.
 
 
Today
Jan 22
Mostly Sunny

72°/42°

0 %

 
45°F
Partly Cloudy Feels Like
41°F



UV Index: 0 Minimal
Dew Point: 39°F
Humidity: 81%
Visibility: Unlimited
Pressure: 30.25 inches and rising
Wind: From the East Southeast at 7 mph

As reported at Chandler, AZ Last Updated Wednesday, January 22, 2003, at 7:47 AM Mountain Standard Time (Wednesday, 9:47 AM EST).
 

8 posted on 01/22/2003 7:43:54 AM PST by Jeff Chandler ( ; -)
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To: areafiftyone
LOL. The high temperature in New York City tomorrow is supposed to be 17.

People look at me kind of funny when I wait for the train in New Jersey with just a light overcoat and no hat.

Living in western Canada prepares you for some REAL cold. During the winter of 2000-2001 the coldest temperature in Calgary was -32F. Cold enough to freeze the moisture in your eyes and inside your mouth.

And cold enough to freeze your car tires flat on one side overnight from standing in the same position. The tires make a funny "bumpity-bumpity" sound for the first few miles you drive in the morning, until they are warm enough to rotate correctly.

9 posted on 01/22/2003 7:44:29 AM PST by Alberta's Child
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To: NewHampshireDuo
They forget about us down south here. The arctic blast is going to hit us tonight. Expecting 3 or more inches of snow here in SC. I am sick of the cold weather! My family jokes that it is the Canadians fault (Canadian cold blasts or they are altering the jet stream) - Damn Canadians we should have taken over when we had the chance. ;) It suppose to be a high of 30 on Friday and a low of 14!!
10 posted on 01/22/2003 7:46:21 AM PST by Babsig
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To: NewHampshireDuo
I live on the MA/NH border and it's F'ing cold here as well. My wife and I love to cruise NH in our 'vette, but not under these conditions!
11 posted on 01/22/2003 7:48:40 AM PST by bribriagain
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To: NewHampshireDuo
Skied Jay Peak a few years back. What a great mountain and tram. We went accross the border to pick up a few cases of Canadian brewed beer (higher alcohol content than in U.S.) sent skiing and retrieved the cold beer form the snow bank....great memories.
12 posted on 01/22/2003 7:52:48 AM PST by 1Old Pro
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To: NewHampshireDuo
“Wind chill is if you’re standing out there naked, and I don’t see anyone out there naked,” Slattery said.

“It’s something weathermen use to scare the general public with.”

He's right, of course. You listen to the weather report on the radio, and they never tell you what the FReepin' temperature is, anymore. All they talk about is the wind chill. I, for one, wear clothes to work (for which my co-workers are eternally grateful).

A couple of weeks ago, the radio told me the wind chill was 24 degrees. I go outside and it was about 45 and breezy, and there I was in a parka! Grrrrr!

Just read the FReepin' thermometer and give me the FReepin' temperature!

13 posted on 01/22/2003 8:03:09 AM PST by gridlock (Blocking the box since 1999)
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To: avg_freeper
You can be sure the media will "forget" about this cold spell when we are treated to the next hot spell and the next round of global warming BS. Climates change and this is a 100 year cold record, but hey, if you are a lefty, you keep beating your drum.
14 posted on 01/22/2003 8:06:47 AM PST by KC_for_Freedom
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To: Alberta's Child
Way north of Toronto. At 8 am this morning it was -36f . Right now, the thermometer says -34f, with a windchill of -40f . But tommorrow it will be a high of -14 with a low of -26. Sounds like summer is on the way. Almost just around the corner :)

If you think car tires make a bumpity noise. Try it with a truck. The whole thing bounces up and down until they round out again. And vehicle exaust, it becomes fog. As in, I can't see the guy in front of me for fog !
15 posted on 01/22/2003 8:11:18 AM PST by Snowyman
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To: Snowyman
Where exactly are you "way north of Toronto?"

I've been to more places in Canada than most Canadians, and in eastern Ontario (east of Lake Superior) I've been to places like North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie, Timmins, and Kirkland Lake.

16 posted on 01/22/2003 8:28:25 AM PST by Alberta's Child
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To: Jeff Chandler
HEY - That's not fair!!
17 posted on 01/22/2003 8:50:15 AM PST by areafiftyone (BUSH/CHENEY 2004)
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To: Babsig
You guys are getting all the snow - its too cold up here in New York and its keeping the moisture down south. Can you believe the weatherman said its too cold up here for Snow? Wow!
18 posted on 01/22/2003 8:52:07 AM PST by areafiftyone (BUSH/CHENEY 2004)
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To: Alberta's Child
This cold reminds me of when I was little. We had great winters then with lots of snow.
19 posted on 01/22/2003 8:54:49 AM PST by areafiftyone (BUSH/CHENEY 2004)
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To: Alberta's Child
People look at me kind of funny when I wait for the train in New Jersey with just a light overcoat and no hat.

I actually got questioned by one of my fellow passengers on the D.C. Metro this morning for wearing shorts (I like to shower and change to work clothes when I get to work).

20 posted on 01/22/2003 8:57:24 AM PST by aristeides
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